Reference no: EM133276125
Data Case for Chapter 26: Working Capital Management
You are the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of BP. This afternoon you played golf with a member of the company's board of directors. Somewhere during the back nine, the board member enthusiastically described a recent article she had read in a leading management journal. This article noted several companies that had improved their stock price performance through effective working capital management, and the board member was intrigued. She wondered whether BP was managing its working capital effectively and, if not, whether BP could accomplish something similar. How was BP managing its working capital, and how does it compare to its competitors? Upon returning home, you decide to do a quick preliminary investigation using information freely available on the Internet.
1) Obtain BP's financial statements for the past four years from Yahoo! Finance.
a) Enter the stock symbol (BP) in the box and click "Get Quotes."
b) Under "Financials," click "Income Statement." Copy and paste the statement into Excel (if using Internet Explorer, place the cursor in the statement and right-click the mouse, then choose "Export to Microsoft Excel" from the menu).
c) Go back to the Web page and under "Financials," click "Balance Sheet"; repeat the download procedure for the balance sheet.
d) Copy and paste the balance sheet so that it is on the same worksheet as the income statement. 2) Obtain the competitors' ratios for comparison from Yahoo! Finance (https://finance.yahoo.com). a) Enter Exxon Mobil Corporation's stock symbol (XOM) in the box at the top and click "Get Quotes."
b) Follow the steps in Part 1 to obtain "net receivables" and "inventory" from the most recent annual balance sheet, and "total revenue" and "cost of revenue" from the most recent annual income statement.
c) Repeat the two steps above for Chevron Corporation (CVX).
3) Compute the cash conversion cycle for BP for each of the last three years.
a) Compute the inventory days using "cost of revenue" as cost of goods sold and a 365-day year. b) Compute accounts receivable days using a 365-day year.
c) Compute accounts payable days.
d) Compute the cash conversion cycle for each year.
4) How has BP's CCC changed over the last few years?
5) Compare BP's inventory and receivables turnover ratios for the most recent year to those of its competitors.
a) Compute BP's inventory turnover ratio as cost of revenue/inventory.
b) Compute BP's receivable turnover ratio as total revenue/net receivables.
c) Compute the average inventory turnover ratio and average receivable turnover ratio of Chevron and Exxon Mobil. How do BP's numbers compare to the average ratios of its competitors? Do they confirm or refute your answer to Question 4?
6) Determine how BP's free cash flow would change if BP's inventory and accounts receivable balances were adjusted to meet the industry averages.
7) Determine the amount of additional free cash flow that would be available if BP adjusted its accounts payable days to 75 days.
8) Determine the net amount of additional free cash flow and BP's cash conversion cycle if its inventory and receivables turnover ratios were at the industry average and its payable days were 75 days.
9) What are your impressions regarding BP's working capital management based on this preliminary analysis? Discuss any advantages and disadvantages of bringing the cash conversion cycle more in line with the industry averages.
10) You are somewhat concerned about the reliability of financial data from the Internet, and decide to check the data versus BP's SEC filings. To obtain these filings, go to the SEC Web site and use the EDGAR system to search for BP's financial statements:
Pick search by company name, enter BP in the ticker symbol field, click "Find Companies," and then enter 20-F in the "Filing Type" field, and click "Search." Click on the latest 20-F, "Annual and transition report of foreign private issuers," and then click on the 20-F document link. Once you are in the document, scroll down to the table of contents and select "Financial Statements," and then find either the balance sheet or income statement to find the numbers you need. Is there any discrepancy between these numbers and the data you downloaded originally?